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Tarzan of the Apes : Three Complete Novels (Hardcover)

by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Review
?[Burroughs has] a gift very few writers of any kind possess: he can describe action vividly.? ?Gore Vidal


From the Trade Paperback edition. -- Review

Review
“[Burroughs has] a gift very few writers of any kind possess: he can describe action vividly.” —Gore Vidal


From the Trade Paperback edition.

See all Editorial Reviews

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 650 pages
  • Publisher: Wings (May 19, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0517189070
  • ISBN-13: 978-0517189078
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.2 x 1.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #751,451 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category: (What's this?)

    #88 in  Books > Science Fiction & Fantasy > Authors, A-Z > ( B ) > Burroughs, Edgar Rice


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Customer Reviews

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Once a classic always a classic, August 26, 1999
By A Customer
I have always been a big fan of Burroughs but had never read the Tarzan novels, just the John Carter tales of Mars series. I could not stop reading this book. The real Tarzan is very different from the Hollywood portrayal and the most recent effort from Disney. I have since read many of the other Tarzan novels and have liked them as well, even though the story lines are all very similar. The three stories in this book are some of the best. Be warned, in the first book - 'Tarzan of the Apes' Tarzan is more of an animal than a man. His transformation takes time. Enjoy this timeless classic.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars genuinely exciting and enormous fun to read, November 25, 2000
There are certain books and authors that have an inordinate impact on our lives. Often as not, their particular significance to us as individuals extends far beyond that which they would have to anyone else and sometimes, if we return to them at a different point in our own lives, it can be hard to recapture why they should have seemed so momentous in the first place. One of the authors who really turned me into a reader was Edgar Rice Burroughs and I am ecstatic to find that his books are just as terrific in real life as they are in boyhood memories.

I still vividly recall the cover of Tarzan and the Ant Men, a book which I read and reread in around 5th or 6th grade. It was one of those cheesy 50 cent paperbacks (now they would cost you at least $5.99) and it featured the Lord of the Jungle surrounded by spear wielding pygmies, It was just so ripe with the promise of adventure that, to this day, I can not imagine a human being gazing upon its glory and not being consumed by a desire to read the book. And once you read one, you were faced with a plethora of riches. There are 26 Tarzan novels and myriad movies; plus there was an excellent comic book version and a Saturday morning cartoon at that point. Then there were Burroughs's other series, my particular favorites being the Pellucidar books and John Carter, Warlord of Mars. You could practically read nothing but Burroughs and go for years before having to start rereading stuff. But, of course, the great thing about getting a kid hooked on reading is that one author leads to another. Soon I was mowing down Jules Verne books (see review of Around the World in Eighty Days) and the adventures of Doc Savage, The Avenger, The Shadow, The Lone Ranger, etc., not to mention Tolkein and C.S. Lewis (see review of The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe).

So imagine my pleasure when I found this old Ballantine Books paperback of Tarzan of the Apes, with a cover by Neal Adams showing an enraged Tarzan racing towards a screeching great ape who is grasping a seductively disheveled Jane by her flowing blonde locks. It's amazing, you haven't read a word yet and already your pulse is racing. Then open the book and, wonder of wonders, it's every bit as thrilling and wonderful as I remembered it. Shipwrecks, mutinies, buried treasure, lion attacks, hostile tribesmen, and most of all the ape pack and the herculean efforts of one lost little boy to survive in the forbidding wilds of Africa--what more could a reader want in a book?

Tarzan is one of a small group of fictional characters--the others being Frankenstein, Dracula and Sherlock Holmes--created in the last 200 years who have acquired lives of their own, far outlasting their creators to be constantly reprised and reimagined. If we examine this quartet, they are united by one central theme; each represents man's desire to in some way control nature. Frankenstein is, of course, an expression of our aspiration towards godhood (see Orrin's review), the dream of creating life. Dracula expresses the desire to escape death and achieve immortality. Holmes embodies our hope that pure reason will yield the solutions to life's mysteries. And Tarzan, in all his Darwinian glory, is an assertion of the inevitability that it would be man who rose to the top of the evolutionary totem pole. Each, thus, strikes a chord deep in our being. But what makes them transcendent and fascinating, generation after generation, is the element of uncertainty that each contains. Frankenstein is obviously an experiment run amok. Dracula's immortality comes at an unbearable price. Holmes's hyper-rational mind requires the stimulation of drugs to battle boredom. And Tarzan is trapped uneasily between the civilized and the savage worlds. In this context he implicates two issues, one obvious--man's control over nature, the other less so--the effect of civilization on mankind.

As to the first issue, I was pleasantly surprised at the recent Disney version of Tarzan. In light of films like Pocahontas and Lion King, I just expected it to be politically correct pabulum. That implicit message of Tarzan--that man naturally and rightfully rules nature, disposing of its bounty at his will--is so anathema to the environmentalist hegemony of our times that you sort of had to assume that Disney would eviscerate the story. They did alter it substantially, particularly by not having Tarzan fight Kerchak to become leader of the ape pack, but they left enough of the basic tale intact to satisfy all but the most fanatic ERBites. And, at the end of the day, you can argue about the propriety of man controlling the environment and exploiting nature, but it is pretty hard to argue against the power of Burrough's metaphorical image of the youthful human Tarzan becoming the Lord of the Jungle. Simply taken as a cultural symbol, Tarzan is fascinating, a modern myth comparable to any ancient one.

On the second issue, Tarzan's unique upbringing and his very role as the hero of these books along with the helplessness displayed by "civilized" whites when they enter the jungle, raises the question of whether civilization is simply a veneer which we could drop if necessary (as London implies in Call of the Wild [see review] and The Sea Wolf [see review]) or whether civilization strips away something primal and valuable in our natures. In a famous essay on the Tarzan books, Gore Vidal asserts that:

a good many people find their lives so unsatisfactory that they go right on year after year telling themselves stories in which they are able to dominate their environment in a way that is not possible in this overorganized society

His snitty point is about domination and what losers the readers of these books must be (of course, he more than likely spent his closeted youth reading Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and look how he turned out), but it is the "overorganized society" part of this comment that is the most interesting, obliquely pointing out the subtext of the weakening influence of modern society on mankind. If we accept Darwin's theory of survival of the fittest--which we will for the sake of this discussion--then what happens when the threats to our survival are removed, or at the very least reduced? Tarzan suggests the possibility that the pressures of the fight for survival forge a stronger man than the advances of modern civilization can hope to compete with.

It is with this perspective that we can perceive the irony that Tarzan--the son of an English Lord, raised in Africa--is the quintessential American hero. Embodying the elements of rugged individualism and self-reliance, he is an archetype in the tradition of Natty Bumpo. It is no surprise then that this series of books is probably the most successful and popular in all of American Literature.

But enough analysis. The important thing about these books is that they are genuinely exciting and are enormous fun to read.

GRADE: A+

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Adventure on a grand scale, March 31, 2004
By A Customer
There has been so much ink spilt over ERB and his most popular creation, Tarzan, that there is nothing for me to add. I just want to take this moment to doff my hat to ERB. What an imagination! Opening almost any Burroughs book is like peeking into a box filled with wonders. Yes, the language is difficult to take sometimes, and there are archaisms in scientific and cultural areas that make a modern reader wince, but who wouldn't want to read a book filled with all the action and adventure you could possibly desire! Books where the hero wins the heart of The Most Beautiful Woman on the Planet/Island/Core/Wherever, where by the strength of his sword arm he wins kingdoms and the devotion of other warriors, where pirates and green six-armed martians do battle, where dinosaurs walk, and great apes talk. Of course, I could go on and on. In this increasingly cynical world, it helps to escape to a place called Barsoom and fight rebel Tharks. It helps to think that somewhere, bad guys are trembling because one man carrying nothing but a knife is coming, inexorably, and when he arrives justice will be done. Sigh. I think I will take the rest of the day off and take to the literary trees.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Meeting Tarzan the Ape Man again, for the First Time
We all know Tarzan the Ape Man...some of us grew up with him...but how many of really know him...really, really know him... Read more
Published on June 6, 2006 by Big D

5.0 out of 5 stars ERB's Wordly Knowledge Shines
Edgar Rice Burroughs was once described as one of the greatest undiscovered great American treasures. Read more
Published on February 19, 2002 by Ian Grey

5.0 out of 5 stars Gets Your Mind in Gear
This book brings Tarzan to life. I enjoyed it and read it many times. Everyone must wonder what it's like to grow up in a jungle and now you can read it. Read more
Published on September 5, 2000 by Jessica Steinmetz

5.0 out of 5 stars Tarzan and a 16 year old reader... Amazing
I am a sophomore in high school and, while in my English 102 class at the college, our class read an exerpt from Tarzan of the Apes. Read more
Published on April 2, 2000 by A Star Wars Fan

5.0 out of 5 stars A rivting novel, by a Chicago author, of my childhood hero.
As a child of the 60's I grew up watching the Tarzan series on tv. To pick up the Burroughs version in print is, to put you into the jungle and the day to day survival of an... Read more
Published on January 12, 1999 by emtsoul@hotmail.com

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